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  • "Impossible Foods beefed up its roster of meat alternatives." "It's a

  • burger that's become quite popular."

  • "Now, the meatless craze sweeping through grocery stores, restaurants,

  • even down the street at Carl's Jr." Despite the buzz around

  • plant-based alternatives and vegan recipes, Americans still love

  • meat. In 2018, Americans consumed more than 180 pounds of beef, pork

  • and poultry, 10% more than in 1970.

  • Plant based meat retail sales were $760 million dollars in 2019, a

  • fraction of the total meat and poultry sales.

  • Whether it's at your favorite fast food restaurant or in the grocery

  • aisle, one company that carnivores turn to again and again is Tyson

  • Foods. Tyson Foods is one of the world's largest food companies and

  • produces roughly 20% of the beef, pork and chicken in the U.S.

  • IT services restaurants and schools and sells brands like Jimmy Dean

  • and Sara Lee in supermarkets.

  • But in the spring of 2020, restaurants closed as governments enforced

  • social distancing rules.

  • And in April, thousands of infected Tyson workers at processing

  • plants caused facilities to shut down, causing meat shortages at

  • grocery stores across the country.

  • The 85-year-old food giant faced the perfect storm: higher production

  • costs, lower levels of productivity and softer demand.

  • "We've implemented a wide number of measures to look after our workers

  • from measuring temperatures as they come through the door.

  • Face coverings, staggered breaks, expanded room, social distancing.

  • All of these are designed to help keep our workers safe.

  • And keeping our workers safe is what will keep our plants running.

  • And, of course, where necessary, we've been willing to close those

  • plants and to deep clean them in order to make sure that we can get

  • back to speed as quickly as possible."

  • But analysts argue that after decades of industry consolidation, some

  • of Tyson's problems may have been self-inflicted.

  • "Covid-19 has exposed weaknesses in the meat system that people have

  • been talking about for years, but that have never been exposed as

  • they were now and essentially what Covid-19 showed was the profound

  • fragility that happens when you move all of your production into a

  • few slaughterhouses as possible."

  • So can one of America's biggest meat suppliers recover from the

  • devastating blows of 2020?

  • Or has the Covid-19 crisis created an opening for rivals JBS, Cargill

  • and Smithfield Foods to overtake them?

  • In the early 1930s, 25-year-old John Tyson left his family's farm in

  • Missouri in search of a better life.

  • The Great Depression meant jobs were scarce.

  • But after arriving in Arkansas, Tyson saw opportunity all around him

  • in the form of chickens.

  • Chicken was a delicacy in Midwestern cities at the time, so Tyson

  • loaded up his truck and started hauling birds to markets as far away

  • as Chicago and Kansas City.

  • In 1947, Tyson was not only transporting the chickens to market, but

  • also selling baby chicks and feed to farmers.

  • "Tyson Foods was at the forefront of the revolution in

  • vertically-integrated meat production.

  • And it's not like you can go back in time and point at one person as

  • being the, quote, inventor of vertically-integrated meat production.

  • But if you would, John Tyson Sr.

  • would be really close."

  • But it was Tyson's son, Don, who many credit with turning a simple

  • chicken business into a global empire.

  • Don joined the company after dropping out of college in 1952, built

  • the company's first processing plant, and became CEO in 1967 after

  • the death of his parents in a car train accident.

  • In 1963, Tyson went public, selling 100,000 shares at $10.50 each.

  • By the 1970s, there was an explosion of industrialized,

  • vertically-integrated poultry production in the U.S., with about

  • three dozen companies controlling half of the chicken market,

  • including Pilgrim's Pride, Sanderson Farms, Perdue Farms and of

  • course, Tyson.

  • "Chicken was really the first animal that was produced like a widget

  • on an industrial assembly line.

  • And so the amount of chicken that was available just exploded during

  • this time." By the late 70s, Tyson was producing over 230 million

  • birds per year. And with a grow-or-die philosophy, Don Tyson's

  • company started acquiring competitors and expanding the family

  • business. "Starting in about 1980, you see this enormous wave of

  • consolidation sweep across the industry, where a handful of companies

  • who have really good relationships with investors on Wall Street,

  • where they could raise the capital to go on a merger spree with Tyson

  • Foods being probably the premier company in this way.

  • They went out and bought their competitors and they rolled up

  • ownership into a handful of firms."

  • By the mid 80s, Tyson reached a billion dollars in sales and claimed

  • the number one poultry producing slot in the country.

  • The company went on a buying spree.

  • In 1989, Tyson bought Holly Farms for $1.5 billion dollars, doubling

  • the size of the company. And in 2001, it bought IBP for $3.2 billion

  • dollars, making it one of the world's largest meat producers and

  • processors. "Tyson made a business model out of buying out its

  • competitors and shutting down the older, smaller slaughterhouses and

  • moving more and more production into a handful of very large, highly

  • sophisticated slaughterhouses where they could add value to the

  • product." In 2014, Tyson bought Hillshire Brands for $7.7 billion

  • dollars. And in a bid to boost its sales at restaurants, in 2018,

  • Tyson bought McDonald's chicken nuggets supplier Keystone Foods $2.1

  • billion dollars.

  • In 2019, Tyson had a net income of $2 billion dollars, a 66% increase

  • from 2015. And by June 2020, Tyson had a market value of $21 billion

  • dollars, almost double the amount it had at the start of 2014.

  • The meat and poultry business in the U.S.

  • is a $232 billion dollar market, according to IBISWorld.

  • In 2017 alone, the industry processed 9 billion chickens, 121 million

  • pigs and more than 32 million cows for kitchen tables across the U.S.

  • While the scale is hard to comprehend, industry consolidation has led

  • to just a few key players.

  • The four biggest companies, Tyson Foods, JBS, Cargill and Smithfield

  • Foods, control anywhere from about 40 to 60% percent of supply,

  • depending on the type of animal.

  • Volatile commodity prices keep profit margins tight, forcing Tyson

  • and other meat processors to keep a close eye on costs.

  • Tyson has more than 200 plants in the U.S.

  • and had global sales of $42.4 billion dollars in 2019.

  • About a third of revenue came from the sale of beef, another third

  • came from the sale of chicken, and the remainder of the company's

  • revenue came from pork prepared foods and international sales.

  • The company sells about 45% of its products to retailers like

  • supermarkets, 31% to foodservice businesses like restaurants and

  • about 11% to packaged food companies.

  • The remainder of revenue comes from exports.

  • Tyson is the largest chicken producer in the U.S., followed by

  • Pilgrim's Pride. Pilgrim's has more than 30 plants in the U.S.

  • and processed about $1.7 billion birds in 2019.

  • The U.S. poultry industry has come under increased scrutiny in recent

  • years as consumers and grocery stores have accused Tyson Foods,

  • Pilgrim's Pride and other processors of inflating the price of

  • chickens. In June 2020.

  • Pilgrim's CEO Jason Penn, along with other chicken industry

  • executives, including Claxton Poultry Farms President, Mikell Fries,

  • were indicted for conspiring to fix prices on broiler chickens from

  • 2012 through 2017.

  • In a statement, Pilgrim's said the company is committed to high

  • ethical standards, governance, and free and open competition that

  • benefits both customers and consumers.

  • Tyson was not named in the indictment, but a few weeks later said it

  • was cooperating with the U.S.

  • Department of Justice on a price fixing investigation that could

  • shield the company from criminal prosecution.

  • Pilgrim' is majority owned by Greeley, Colorado-based JBS, which is

  • also one of the world's largest beef and pork processing companies

  • and a subsidiary of Brazilian-based JBS S.A.

  • "So chicken is ground zero, if you will, for this model of vertical

  • integration and consolidation that happened fastest and most

  • dramatically in the chicken business.

  • Well, then these companies realized what a huge opportunity this was.

  • So they essentially exported that model to beef and pork."

  • The beef category is also dominated by a handful of companies.

  • At the top of the pack alongside Tyson and JBS is Cargill, a private

  • company that has more than three dozen processing plants in North

  • America. "So a typical plant shift at, say, a pork or a beef or even

  • a poultry packing plant might have 800 to 1,000 workers or more on a

  • given shift. And they typically are close and oftentimes it's

  • challenging to have six foot six feet, rather, of social distancing."

  • In 2019, Cargill had revenue of $113.5 five billion dollars.

  • In the pork category, the biggest producers are Smithfield Foods, JBS

  • and Tyson Foods.

  • The world's largest pork producer.

  • Smithfield Foods, started operations in 1936.

  • The company grew rapidly with more than 30 acquisitions since 1981.

  • In 2013, Smithfield was bought by Hong Kong-based WH Group for $4.7

  • billion dollars. WH Group is publicly traded on the Hong Kong Stock

  • Exchange. While supermarkets were seeing shortages and higher prices

  • in 2020, China was receiving a record amount of pork exports from

  • U.S. companies. In June 2020 Democratic senators Elizabeth Warren and

  • Corey Booker sent a letter to chief executives of Tyson, Cargill,

  • Smithfield and JBS, criticizing them for exporting pork and other

  • meats to China while threatening the American public with impending

  • shortages. Tyson told CNBC in a statement, "In recent months, we've

  • prioritized supplying meat to the U.S.

  • domestic market and have voluntarily curtailed shipping those pork

  • export items that are also used by domestic consumers to try to meet

  • U.S. demand." The coronavirus pandemic hit Tyson with two

  • major crises, with consumers eating more meals at home due to

  • restaurant closures, Tyson faced a shift in demand from food service

  • to retail. "Well, certainly we saw a pretty big falloff in food

  • services as schools and restaurants were closed.

  • But at the end of the day, you know, people are not resigned to

  • eating less. And so you saw a big spike in retail.

  • For our company, that works out to be a net negative because not all

  • of the plants can be switched over to produce food for retail, but

  • we've certainly been very successful in a number of them.

  • As the world economy began to shut down in March 2020, Tyson stock

  • fell to a more than one year low of $44."

  • "It definitely was disruptive to their business, but for the most

  • part, they were able to ship that those products over to the retail

  • channel, which was experiencing unprecedented demand."

  • But the second crisis had far bigger implications for the company as

  • well as the entire food supply network.

  • According to the CDC, during the spring of 2020, more than 16,000 US

  • employees from Tyson and other companies working at meat and poultry

  • processing plants across the country contracted Covid-19 and 86 died,

  • forcing about two dozen plants to close.

  • Meat processing employees often work in tight quarters on high speed

  • lines that place them at greater risk of contracting or spreading

  • Covid-19. "Meat processing is a very labor intensive process.

  • So you have employees standing in close proximity to each other,

  • which, you know, really made it very difficult to control the

  • disease. So several meat processing plants had outbreaks."

  • The Midwest Center for Investigative Reporting said the numbers were

  • much more grim. It said as of July 17, 2020, at least 33,000 U.S.

  • workers at meat processing plants have been infected and at least 133

  • have died. The group said workers at more than 40 Tyson plants have

  • been infected in at least 12 plants have temporarily closed.

  • In May 2020, 40% of workers at a Tyson Foods pork processing plant in

  • Indiana tested positive for Covid-19.

  • The plant temporarily halted operations on April 25th.

  • At a pork processing plant in Iowa, more than a thousand workers were

  • infected with the virus that same month, according to county health

  • officials. "Tyson and other companies have been working as hard as

  • they can for decades to put as much production into a few

  • slaughterhouses and and then to cram as many employees as possible

  • into as little space in those slaughterhouses so that they can

  • process as many animals as possible, as quickly as possible to pay

  • off the investment of these really sophisticated mega

  • slaughterhouses." For Tyson, plant closures meant shrinking output,

  • plus an increase in operating costs to ensure new safety protocols.

  • Tyson deployed infrared body temperature scanners at some U.S.

  • sites and plastic dividers to protect workers.

  • But for those employees who didn't feel comfortable returning to work

  • in June 2020, the company wasn't giving out sick days.

  • According to news reports, Tyson doesn't have paid sick leave but

  • offer short-term disability coverage for employees who are ill.

  • CNBC reached out to Tyson Foods, but they did not respond to a

  • request for an interview.

  • Plant closures had a ripple effect across other parts of the supply

  • chain, too. With Tyson's U.S.

  • hog processing capacity nearly cut in half, farmers who were

  • struggling to find a buyer were now forced to euthanize excess

  • animals. Due to supply chain issues, more than 10 million pigs will

  • need to be culled, according to the National Pork Producers Council.

  • "If you consider the plants in the industry that have already been

  • closed and you look at the public data from USDA, you will see that

  • pork and beef processing are down somewhere between 20 and 30%."

  • In April 2020, Tyson Chairman John Tyson took out a full page

  • newspaper ad that said the food supply chain is breaking.

  • Days later, President Trump invoked the Defense Production Act,

  • ordering meatpacking plants to remain open.

  • "We didn't have widespread, massive meat shortages, but we did have an

  • interruption in the supply chain and a product-by-product level of

  • shortage. But what that did is for the first time, it really brought

  • Americans face-to-face with the reality of the industrialized meat

  • system that we depend on every day for our food.

  • There really has never been a shortage like this in modern times."

  • In May 2020, Tyson reported its fiscal second quarter.

  • net income had fallen 15 percent from a year earlier.

  • With the coronavirus wreaking havoc on U.S.

  • processing plants, Tyson might be looking to the horizon for its next

  • generation of consumers.

  • During a November 2019 earnings call, Tyson CEO Noel White said about

  • 90% of future growth in the global protein demand could take place

  • outside of the U.S.

  • Since 2018. China, the world's top pork producer, has killed millions

  • of pigs as it battled African swine fever.

  • During a February conference call with analysts, White said Tyson had

  • year-over-year increases of nearly 600% to China in the first quarter

  • of 2020. China has also seen a surge of U.S.

  • poultry imports since the country ended an almost five year ban on

  • the trade in November 2019.

  • "China, just in November, eliminated their ban on U.S.

  • chicken, so we expect to see a lot more chicken heading over to China

  • and and just pork in general as the Chinese are large consumers of

  • pork and now they have a significant shortage.

  • So we do think that Tyson will benefit from that over the long term."

  • The company is expanding into markets at home, too.

  • While the number of vegan and vegetarians in the U.S.

  • over the past decade has remained flat, the interest in plant-based

  • foods is on the rise.

  • Consumption of plant=based foods also took off during the pandemic as

  • consumers continue to adopt healthier diets while facing shortages of

  • meat at grocery stores.

  • Tyson, once an investor in Beyond Meat, launched its first

  • plant-based product in 2019.

  • In June of that year, the company rolled out chicken-less chicken

  • nuggets and a blended burger that combines plants and beef.

  • But despite these new markets, analysts think Tyson's structural

  • problems could come back to haunt them.

  • "There's a strong chance that we're not out of the woods on this yet.

  • The virus is still spreading.

  • The number of cases inside slaughterhouses continues to rise.

  • The companies are not being forthcoming about how many of their

  • employees have this virus.

  • And and you could see how the companies might need to continue

  • selective shutdowns of plants going through this summer.

  • You know, and God forbid, if we have a second wave this autumn or

  • this fall, the supply chain issue is going to remain, you know, I

  • think, front and center for a lot of American consumers."

"Impossible Foods beefed up its roster of meat alternatives." "It's a

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泰森如何打破肉类供应链(How Tyson Broke The Meat Supply Chain)

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    joey joey 發佈於 2021 年 04 月 21 日
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